I believe that the behavior you are describing is documented in the User Manual section on Next Actions which says “Note: If there are Active Tasks without parent project then only first task for each root task is selected.” The wording is a little stiff but it is completely consistent with the observed behaviour making me believe that it’s all intentional. There’s just one glitch which is this: I believe the statement should have been “Note: If there are Active Tasks without parent project then only first task for each root item is selected.” It’s my opinion that rules like this apply equally to tasks, projects and filters, but the word “task” does not communicate this quite as clearly as “item”.
I recognize that this is a case where MLO’s out-of-the-box function differs from what you would prefer. In the long run, that doesn’t matter, what matters is whether you can use the power of MLO to make a view that does what you want. Usually that’s the case though the jury is still out for your version of next actions by project.
As an aside, there are MLO users who try to adhere to GTD orthodoxy. And there are those who do something entirely unrelated to GTD. A lot of us, though, use something personal and idiosyncratic that’s inspired by GTD. So when you find a case where MLO’s default action differs from your understanding of GTD orthodoxy, that does not necessarily justify changing MLO’s action to be more nearly compliant. That’s because there are some users out there who are counting on the existing functionality. I have been stung several times (and the developers I’m sure have been stung even more) by proposing clear improvements in MLO functionality only to face a chorus of angry protests from fans of the prior functionality.
So the better question to ask is, how can MLO provide any tools you need but don’t have that will let you build your dream view.
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So it's almost as if MLO is treating a Folder as if it were a Project. i.e. MLO is 'filtering in' the Next Action within the Folder as if it were finding the Next Action within a Project. Now, if I had ticked the "This is a project" box on the directory then that would make perfect sense. However the "This is a project" box is emphatically not ticked!
Either way, surely we don't want to see "Next Action by Folder" because the folders are just supposed to be merely containers for subject areas and they do not indicate that something is actually a live Project!
Hi, John.
Sounds like a different and interesting way of managing tasks with MLO. I look forward to hearing more as you progress.
The only reason for importance and urgency is for use in sorting your tasks. If I understand correctly you will be manually sorting (ie physical sort) which would mean that neither of these fields matter, except insofar as the data is helpful to you yourself. My thoughts (drawn from life, not software) is that people tend to allocate too much energy to urgent tasks that may be unimportant and not enough to important tasks that are not urgent. Coding these separately help me keep track of this problem.
-Dwight
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